Write-once type optical disc, and method and apparatus for managing defective areas on write-once type optical disc using TDMA information

ABSTRACT

A recording medium of writable once type, and a method and apparatus for managing a defective area on the recording medium are provided. The method includes detecting an existence of a defective area within a data area of the recording medium once data are written onto the data area in a data writing operation; writing data written in the defective area onto a spare area of the data area if the defective area is detected; writing temporary management information pertaining to the defective area, onto a temporary management area on the recording medium; and writing access information for accessing the temporary management information, onto a reserved area on the recording medium.

This application claims the priority benefit of the Korean Patent Application Nos. P2002-059341 filed on Sep. 30, 2002, and P2003-001859 filed on Jan. 11, 2003, the entire contents of which are herein fully incorporated by reference.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

1. Field of the Invention

The present invention relates to an optical disc of write-once type, such as a Blu-ray Disc Write Once (BD-WO), and a method and apparatus for managing a defective area on the write-once type optical disc.

2. Background of the Related Art

A new type of high density optical disc such as a Blu-ray Disc Rewritable (BD-RE) is being developed. A benefit of the BD-RE is that it has a rewritable capability where the quality video and audio data can be written, erased and rewritten thereon repeatedly.

FIG. 1 is a block diagram of a general optical disc device for writing/reproducing data to/from an optical disc such as a BD-RE. As shown in FIG. 1, the optical disc device includes an optical pickup 11 for recording/reproducing a signal to/from a BD-RE 10, a video disc recorder (VDR) system 12 for processing a signal from the optical pickup 11 as a reproduced signal, or demodulating and processing an external data stream into a writable signal suitable for writing onto the BD-RE 10, and an encoder 13 for encoding an external analog signal and providing the encoded signal to the VDR system 12.

FIG. 2 shows a structure of a related art BD-RE. Referring to FIG. 2, the BD-RE is divided into a Lead-In Area (LIA), a data area, and a Lead-Out area (LOA), with an Inner Spare Area (ISA) and an Outer Spare Area (OSA) assigned to a fore end and a rear end of the data area.

Referring to FIGS. 1 and 2, the VDR system 12 of the optical disc device writes in the data area of the BD-RE the external data in clusters corresponding to an ECC block unit having a predetermined size of recording, after the VDR system 12 encodes and demodulates the external signal into a signal suitable for writing. During the writing process, if there is a defective area found in the data area of the BD-RE, the VDR system 12 carries out a series of replacement writing operations in which the clusters of data written onto the defective area is written onto one of the spare areas, e.g., on the ISA in place of the defective area. Therefore, even if there is a defective area in the data area of the BD-RE, the VDR system 12 can prevent a data writing error in advance by writing the clusters of data written in the defective area onto the spare area.

A Blu-ray Disc Write-Once (BD-WO) is another type of high density optical disc that is being developed where a high quality of data can be recorded and reproduced to/from the disc. As the name may suggest, data can be written only once on the BD-WO and is not rewritable on the BD-WO, but the BD-WO can be read repeatedly. As a result, the BD-WO is useful where the rewritability of data on a recording medium is not desired.

Unfortunately, since the BD-WO is still in the early development stage, there are no schemes, no disc structures, no apparatuses and no methods on how to manage the defective areas of the BD-WO, which will be needed for the BD-WO to be commercially viable and operationally feasible.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

Accordingly, the present invention is directed to a technique for managing a defective area on an optical disc of write-once type such as a BD-WO.

An object of the present invention is to provide a write-once type optical disc, and an apparatus and method for effectively managing a defective area of the write-once type optical disc.

Additional features and advantages of the invention will be set forth in the description which follows, and in part will be apparent to those having ordinary skill in the art upon examination of the following or may be learned from practice of the invention. The objectives and other advantages of the invention will be realized and attained by the structure particularly pointed out in the written description and claims hereof as well as the appended drawings.

In accordance with an aspect of the invention, a method for managing a defective area on a recording medium of writable once type, the recording medium including a data area, the data area having a spare area, comprises detecting an existence of a defective area within the data area of the recording medium once data are written onto the data area in a data writing operation; writing data written in the defective area onto the spare area if the defective area is detected; writing temporary management information pertaining to the defective area, onto a temporary management area on the recording medium; and writing access information for accessing the temporary management information, onto a reserved area on the recording medium.

In accordance with another aspect of the invention, a method for managing a defective area on a recording medium of writable once type, the recording medium including a data area, the data area having a spare area, comprises writing data written in the defective area onto the spare area if the defective area is detected; writing temporary management information pertaining to the defective area, onto a temporary management area on the recording medium; writing access information for accessing the temporary management information, onto a reserved area on the recording medium; and transferring, at finalization of a data writing operation on the recording medium, the temporary management information and the access information as defect management area (DMA) information into another area on the recording medium.

In accordance with another aspect of the invention, an apparatus for managing a defective area on a recording medium of writable once type, the recording medium including a data area, the data area having a spare area, the comprises a combination of components for (a) detecting an existence of a defective area within the data area of the recording medium once data are written onto the data area in a data writing operation, (b) writing data written in the defective area onto the spare area if the defective area is detected, (c) writing temporary management information pertaining to the defective area, onto a temporary management area on the recording medium, and (d) writing access information for accessing the temporary management information, onto a reserved area on the recording medium.

In accordance with another aspect of the invention, an apparatus for managing a defective area on a recording medium of writable once type, the recording medium including a data area, the data area having a spare area, comprises a combination of components for (a) writing data written in the defective area onto the spare area if the defective area is detected, (b) writing temporary management information pertaining to the defective area, onto a temporary management area on the recording medium, (c) writing access information for accessing the temporary management information, onto a reserved area on the recording medium, and (d) transferring, at finalization of a data writing operation on the recording medium, the temporary management information and the access information as defect management area (DMA) information into another area on the recording medium.

In accordance with another aspect of the invention, a recording medium of writable once type, comprises at least one recording layer including a data area, the data area having a spare area, wherein an existence of a defective area within the data area of the recording medium is detected once data are written onto the data area in a data writing operation, data written in the defective area is written onto the spare area if the defective area is detected, temporary management information pertaining to the defective area is written onto a temporary management area on the recording medium, and access information for accessing the temporary management information is written onto a reserved area on the recording medium.

In accordance with another aspect of the invention, a recording medium of writable once type, comprises at least one recording layer including a data area and an area outside of the data area, the data area having a spare area, wherein data written in a defective area of the data area is written onto the spare area if the defective area is detected, temporary management information pertaining to the defective area is written onto a temporary management area on the recording medium, access information for accessing the temporary management information is written onto a reserved area on the recording medium, and at finalization of a data writing operation on the recording medium, the temporary management information and the access information are transferred into the area outside of the data area as defect management area (DMA) information.

It is to be understood that both the foregoing description and the following detailed description of the present invention are exemplary and explanatory and are intended to provide further explanation of the invention claimed.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

The accompanying drawings, which are included to provide a further understanding of the invention and are incorporated in and constitute a part of this application, illustrate embodiment(s) of the invention and together with the description serve to explain the principle of the invention. In the drawings;

FIG. 1 illustrates a related art optical disc device schematically;

FIG. 2 illustrates a structure of a related art BD-RE;

FIG. 3 illustrates a block diagram of an optical disc recording/reproducing device according to the present invention;

FIG. 4 illustrates a structure of a BD-WO and a diagram illustrating a method for managing a defective area on the BD-WO in accordance with a preferred embodiment of the present invention;

FIGS. 5 and 6 illustrate diagrams each showing management information produced and written according to the method of FIG. 4;

FIG. 7 illustrates a structure of a dual layer BD-WO having the present invention applied thereto; and

FIG. 8 illustrates a structure of a BD-WO and a diagram illustrating a method for managing a defective area on the BD-WO in accordance with another preferred embodiment of the present invention.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS

Reference will now be made in detail to the preferred embodiments of the present invention, examples of which are illustrated in the accompanying drawings.

FIG. 3 is an example of a block diagram of an optical disc recording/reproducing device 20 according to an embodiment of the present invention. The optical disc recording/reproducing device 20 includes an optical pickup 22 for writing/reading data to/from an optical recording medium 21, a servo unit 23 for controlling the pickup 22 to maintain a distance between an objective lens of the pickup 22 and the recording medium 21 and for tracking relevant tracks on the recording medium 21, a data processor 24 for processing and supplying input data to the pickup 22 for writing, and for processing data read from the recording medium 21, an interface 25 for exchanging data and/or commands with any external host 30, a memory or storage 27 for storing information and data therein including defect management data (e.g., temporary management information, etc.) associated with the recording medium 21, and a microprocessor or controller 26 for controlling the operations and elements of the recording/reproducing device 20. Data to be written/read to/from the recording medium 21 may also be stored in the memory 27. All the components of the recording/reproducing device 20 are operatively coupled.

The recording medium 21 is a recording medium of write-once type such as a BD-WO.

FIG. 4 illustrates a structure of a BD-WO and a method for managing a defective area on the BD-WO in accordance with a preferred embodiment of the present invention.

Referring to FIG. 4, for example, the BD-WO includes a lead-in area (LIA) 36, a data area 31, and a lead-out area (LOA) 34. The data area 31 includes a user data area 32 assigned with physical sector numbers (PSN) and logical sector numbers (LSN), and non-user data areas having only the physical sector numbers assigned thereto.

The non-user data areas include an outer spare area (OSA) 35 for writing data in place of a defective area of the user data area 32, and a Temporary Defect List (TDFL) area 33 for writing temporary management information pertaining to the defective areas of the user data area 32 and to the spare area(s) replacing the defective areas.

The data area 31 may further include an inner spare area (ISA) (not shown) at a front part of the data area 31 in addition to or in lieu of the OSA 35. The TDFL area may be located at a position adjacent to the OSA in lieu of the TDFL area 33 or in addition to the TDFL area 33.

The LIA 36 includes a Defect Management Area (DMA) 36 c at any part of the LIA 36, and a Temporary Disc Definition Structure (TDDS) area 36 a at any part of the LIA 36. The TDDS area 36 a stores therein TDDS information. The DMA 36 c stores therein DMA information including Disc Definition Structure (DDS) information and Defect List (DFL) information. The TDDS information, DDS information and DFL information will be discussed later in more detail.

The BD-WO can have one or two recording layers. A BD-WO having only a single recording layer (Layer 0) may include a single recording layer composed of a lead-in area (LIA), a data area, and a lead-out area (LOA), and is referred to herein as a single layer disc. A BD-WO having two recording layers (Layers 0 and 1) may include two recording layers each composed of a data area and a LIA (or LOA), and is referred to herein as a dual layer disc. The single layer disc can have a capacity of 23.3, 25.0 or 27.0 Gbytes, whereas the dual layer disc can have a capacity of 46.6, 50.0; or 54.0 Gbytes.

It should be noted that all the different embodiments of the present invention (e.g., various methods discussed herein) are applicable to any type of a write-once optical disc, such as a single layer BD-WO or a dual layer BD-WO. Further, although the use of the recording/reproducing device 20 of FIG. 3 is discussed below in conjunction with the methods of the invention, the invention is not limited to such and encompasses other recording/reproducing devices as long as they are configured to implement the present methods. For instance, the device shown in FIG. 1 may be used to implement the present methods as needed.

Referring to FIGS. 3 and 4, the optical disc recording/reproducing device 20 writes data continuously on a predetermined writing sector in the user data area 32 of the BD-WO, where a writing sector may be set to be a Defect Verify Unit (DVU) of a certain recording size equivalent to one or more than one physical track or cluster on the BD-WO.

After continuously writing the data on the DVUs for a set of data (e.g. Recording 1), the microcomputer 26 controls the pickup 22 to conduct a series of defective area detecting operations on the Recording 1 area of the BD-WO. A defective area detecting operation involves reproducing the data written in a DVU and verifying that the data was properly written on the DVU by, e.g., comparing the actual data reproduced from the DVU with the data that was meant to be written on the DVU. If the verification result indicates that certain data was not properly recorded on a DVU, then the recording/reproducing device 20 assumes that there is a defective area in that DVU of the BD-WO and rewrites the data (directed to the defective DVU) onto a spare area (e.g., OSA 35) using a linear replacement scheme.

For example, after writing first to fifth clusters of data (Clusters #1˜#5) continuously as a first defect verify unit DVU #1 (step S10), the microcomputer 26 controls the pickup 22 to reproduce the data written on DVU #1 progressively (e.g., cluster by cluster), and detects if there is any defective area in DVU #1 by examining the reproduced data. If, for example, a defect is detected in the second cluster Cluster #2 (step S11) at the cluster area 32 a where Cluster #2 is written, the microcomputer 26 controls the data processor 24 and the pickup 22 to carry out a replacement writing operation. In the replacement writing operation, the data written to the Cluster #2 area 32 a, which may be temporarily stored in the memory 27 or some other storage, are written onto a cluster/replacement area within the OSA 35 (step S12). In this instance, Cluster #2 data may be written in the OSA 35 starting from either the rear end or the fore end of the OSA 35.

After the replacement writing for Cluster #2 is completed, the recording/reproducing device 20 checks the next cluster and so on until the last cluster in that DVU is checked. If, for example, a defective area is detected from the fourth cluster Cluster #4 (S13), the recording/reproducing device 20 carries out a replacement writing operation as discussed above to write the data written in the defective Cluster #4 area onto a next available area within the OSA 35, e.g., an area adjacent to the replacement area for Cluster #2 (step S14).

The replacement writing operations continue until data on all the defective clusters in the DVU are written in replacement areas such as spare areas. As a result, in this example, DVU #1 ends up having Clusters #1, #3, and #5 and two defective areas (original Clusters #2 and #4), where the replacement areas (OSA 35) are used to write data thereon in lieu of the two defective areas using a linear replacement scheme.

Once the data recording (Recording 1) having a temporal continuity ends (which includes the data write operations, the defective area detecting operations and replacement writing operations for DVU #1, DVU #2, . . . , DVU #n), the microcomputer 26 writes temporary management information in the form of TDFL information onto the TDFL area 33. In the alternative, when the data recording (e.g., Recording 1) having a temporary continuity ends in the middle of writing the data written in the defective area onto the OSA 35 during the replacement writing operation, the microcomputer 26 may write defect entries onto the TDFL area 33 as TDFL information at that point, and then update the TDFL information as needed subsequently.

The temporary management information is used to manage the defective areas in the data area 31 of the BD-WO and to manage the data written in the replacement areas corresponding to the defective areas. The temporary management information may be managed as, e.g., TDFL information containing one or more TDFLs. FIG. 5 shows a structure of TDFL information according to an embodiment of the invention.

As shown in FIG. 5, the TDFL information includes one or a plurality of TDFLs (TDFL #1˜TDFL #n). Each TDFL may include one or a plurality of defect entries Defect_Entry #1—Defect_Entry #m. Each defect entry has a first physical sector number of a corresponding defective area (PSN of Defective), a first physical sector number of a replacement area corresponding to that defective area (PSN of Replacement), status information (Status), and any other data pertaining to a defect entry. That is, the PSN of Defective is a physical sector number of a starting point of a cluster area containing the defect. Similarly, the PSN of Replacement is a physical sector number of a starting point of a replacement area for replacing the defective cluster area.

As an example only, if the status information (Status) is ‘Status=0000’, this status information indicates that the management information written in the corresponding defect entry is a first-time management information on the data written in lieu of the defective area detected at the time of data writing operation. That is, it indicates that there is no defect in the replacement area (e.g., in the OSA 35) corresponding to the defective area. On the other hand, if the status information is ‘Status=1001’, this status information indicates that the management information written in the corresponding defect entry is not the first-time management information, but is a second-time management information. That is, it indicates that there was a defect in the first replacement area (e.g., in the OSA 35) corresponding to the defective area and the current management information pertains to a new, second replacement area (e.g., in the OSA 35) that replaces the first defective replacement area in the OSA 35.

Once the writing of the TDFL information (e.g., TDFL #1) for Recording 1 is completed, the recording/reproducing device 20 may continue with another data writing operation (e.g., Recording 2) having a temporal continuity. When the data writing operation (Recording 2) ends (which includes the defective area detecting operations and the replacement writing operations for all the DVUs of Recording 2 as discussed above), the temporary management information for Recording 2 may be written onto the TDFL area 33. This process may be repeated as long as all the data to be written in the data area of the BD-WO are properly written.

For fast access to the TDFL information written thus far, the microcomputer 26 may be configured to write fast access information in other part(s) of the BD-WO. The fast access information may be, e.g., Temporary Disc Definition Structure (TDDS) information and may be written in a reserved area 36 a of the LIA 36 (FIG. 4).

As shown in FIG. 5, for instance, the TDDS information includes one or more physical sector numbers (e.g., PSN of TDFL #1) each indicating a location of a TDFL written in the TDFL area 33, flag information (e.g., Spare & TDFL Full Flag) for indicating whether or not the OSA area 35 and/or the TDFL area 33 is full, and any other information pertaining to the TDFL information. Here, a single flag may be used to indicate whether both the OSA area 35 and the TDFL area 33 are full, or multiple flags may be used to indicate whether the OSA area 35 and/or the TDFL area 33 is full. Temporary Defect Management Area (TDMA) information includes the TDDS information and the TDFL information.

FIG. 6 is a diagram illustrating the process of managing defects in replacement areas according to an embodiment of the present invention. Referring to FIGS. 4-6, as an example, in the data writing operation when the second cluster of data (Cluster #2) is written onto a replacement area 35 a within the OSA 35 due to a defect in the corresponding cluster area 32 a of the user data area 32, the recording/reproducing device 20 writes TDFL information pertaining to Cluster #2 onto the TDFL area 33 as discussed above. This TDFL information contains a first defect entry (e.g., Defect_Entry #1) pertaining to Cluster #2, a physical sector number of the replacement area 35 a (PSN of Replacement Cluster #2), a physical sector number of the second cluster area 32 a having a defect (PSN of Defective Cluster #2), the status information of ‘Status=0000’, and so on.

Thereafter, if a new defect is detected in the middle of reproduction of the second cluster of data Cluster #2 written in the replacement area 35 a of the OSA 35 according to the data reproduction operation (step S50), the second cluster of data Cluster #2 is written onto a second replacement area (e.g., area 35 c) of the OSA 35 (step S51). The physical sector number of the second replacement area 35 c (PSN of Replacement Cluster #2 (New)), the physical sector number of the second cluster area 32 a of the user data area 32 having a defect (PSN of Defective Cluster #2), the status information of ‘Status=1001’ (indicating double replacements), etc. are written onto the TDFL area 33 as a (m+1)th defect entry (Defect_Entry #(m+1)). Any defect in the replacement/spare areas is managed in this manner.

When a data reproduction operation is carried out again, the second cluster of data written in the second replacement area 35 c of the OSA 35 is read and reproduced based on the stored TDFL information of the (m+1)th defect entry while disregarding the TDFL information on the first defect entry written before. The status information of ‘1001’ value included in the (m+1)th defect entry (Defect_Entry #(m+1)) indicates to the recording/reproducing device 20 to disregard the data obtained from using the previous defect entry (e.g., Defect_Entry #1).

In this manner, different status values can be designated to indicate priority of defect entries. As a mere example, the status information of ‘1101’ value associated with a defective cluster area may mean that the recording/reproducing device 20 should disregard the next lower priority defect entry having the status information of ‘1001’ value and associated with the same defective cluster area. That is, the status value of ‘1101’ may indicate that a defect is present in the second replacement area and that the present replacement area is a third replacement area replacing the defective second replacement area of the OSA 35. Obviously, any value(s) can be used as the status information.

In one embodiment, if the flag information (e.g. ‘Spare & TDFL Full Flag’) in the TDDS indicates that the OSA 35 and the TDFL area 33 are full with data, then the recording/reproducing device 20 does not carry out, but omits any unnecessary defective area detecting and replacement writing operations. But if the OSA 35 and the TDFL area 33 are not full with data based on the flag information, the recording/reproducing device 20 continues with the defective area detecting and replacement writing operations. The defective area detecting and replacement writing operations can be stopped without a command for finalizing the data writing on the BD-WO, such as a ‘Disc Finalize’ command. Such a command to finalize the data writing on the BD-WO can be generated by the microcomputer 26. For instance, if the user data area 32 or an operator's selected user data is full, then the command to finalize the data writing on the BD-WO may be generated.

In another example, upon reception of the command for finalizing (finalize command) the data writing on the BD-WO, such as a ‘Disc Finalize’ command, in the middle of the defective area detecting and replacement writing operations, and if the flag information indicates that the OSA 35 and the TDFL area 33 are not full, then the recording/reproducing device 20 may keep performing the defective area detecting and replacement writing operations even though the recording/reproducing device 20 stops a general data writing operation (e.g., writing data into the user data area 32).

At the finalization (e.g., in response to the finalize command), the microcomputer 26 reads the TDDS information and the TDFL information written thus far in the areas 36 a and 33, respectively, and writes them permanently onto the Defect Management Area (DMA) 36 c in the LIA 36 as DMA information. That is, TDMA information composed of the TDDS information and the TDFL information is transferred onto the DMA 36 c as DMA information composed of the DDS information and DFL information. The DDS information and DFL information correspond respectively to the TDDS and the TDFL information, but in the DDS information, the PSNs stored in the TDDS information are modified to correspond to the location(s) of the DFLs instead of the location(s) of the TDFLs.

The BD-WO may include a plurality of DMAs with the same DMA information stored in each of the DMAs, so that any loss or inaccurate reading of DMA information may be prevented in view of the duplicability of the DMA information from different DMAs. The first and second defect management areas DMA 1 and 2 may be assigned to the LIA, and third and fourth defect management areas DMA 3 and 4 may be assigned to the LOA. Accordingly, when a recording/reproducing device carries out a data reproduction operation, the data written in the replacement area(s) of the spare area, instead of the defective area(s) of the user data area, can be read and reproduced using the DDS information and the DFL information (DMA information) stored in any one of the DMAs.

Moreover, the data written in a subsequent replacement area due to any defect in the replacement areas can be read and reproduced properly using the status information in the defect entries (Defect_Entrys).

Furthermore, any unnecessary defect detecting and replacement writing operations can be stopped automatically with reference to the flag information (Spare & TDFL Full Flag) included in the TDDS information and the like, if the spare area and the TDFL area are full.

FIG. 7 shows a structure of a dual layer BD-WO according to an embodiment of the present invention. Referring to FIG. 7, the BD-WO is a dual layer-disc having a first layer (Layer #0) and a second layer (Layer #1). The first layer includes a LIA 36, a data area 31 and an outer zone area (Outer Zone 0), whereas the second layer includes a data area 31, an outer zone area (Outer Zone 1), and a LOA 41. Also, a first outer spare area (OSA 0) 35 and a second outer spare area (OSAL) 42 may be assigned to non-user data areas adjacent to the outer zone (Outer Zone 0) of the first layer and the outer zone (Outer Zone 1) of the second layer, respectively.

Applying the above-discussed concepts of the invention, a TDFL area may be located in a non-user data area 33 adjacent to the LIA 36 of the first layer, and a TDFL area may be located in a non-user data area 40 adjacent to the LOA 41 of the second layer. Since the data writing operation generally occur from the start of the user data area 32 a of the first layer (indicated here as “LSN=0”) to the end of the user data area 32 b of the second layer (indicated here as “Last LSN”) in the dotted arrow direction as shown, the TDFL areas 33 and 40 may be used sequentially or independently to store therein the TDFL information. If the TDFL areas 33 and 40 are sequentially used, then the second TDFL area 40 would not be used until the first TDFL area 33 is filled up. If the TDFL areas 33 and 40 are used independently, each TDFL area may be assigned to contain information directed to only one layer. For instance, the TDFL area 33 may contain information pertaining to only the first layer (Layer #0), and the TDFL area 40 may contain information pertaining to only the second layer (Layer #1).

Similarly, the LIA 36 and the LOA 41 may be used sequentially or independently to store therein the TDDS and/or DMA (DDS & DFL) information as discussed above. For instance, if the LIA 36 and the LOA 41 are sequentially used, then the second TDDS area 41 a may not be used until the first TDDS area 36 a is filled up. If the LIA 36 and the LOA 41 are used independently, for instance, the first TDDS area 36 a may contain information pertaining to only the first layer (Layer #0), and the second TDDS area 41 a may contain information pertaining to only the second layer (Layer #1).

Likewise, the first and second DMAs 36 c and 41 c may be used sequentially or independently. For instance, if the DMAs 36 c and 41 c are used sequentially, then the second DMA 41 c would not be used until the first DMA 36 c is filled up. If the DMAs 36 c and 41 c are used independently, then the first DMA 36 c may contain DMA information pertaining only to the first layer (Layer #0) (which may be obtained from the first TDMA areas 33 and 36 a and/or the second TDMA areas 40 and 41 a) or may contain DMA information entirely corresponding to the information stored in the first TDMA areas 33 and 36 a. In the same case, the second DMA 41 c may contain DMA information pertaining only to the second layer (Layer #1) (which may be obtained from the first TDMA areas 33 and 36 a and/or the second TDMA areas 40 and 41 a), or may contain DMA information entirely corresponding to the information stored in the second TDMA areas 40 and 41 a. Other variations are possible.

Each TDFL area may have a recording size equivalent to 2048 physical clusters, and each OSA may have a recording size equivalent to multiple of 256 physical clusters.

FIG. 8 show a structure of a BD-WO and a diagram for illustrating a method of managing defective areas on the BD-WO according to another preferred embodiment of the present invention. This embodiment is identical to the embodiment shown in FIGS. 4-6 above, except that both the TDFL information and the TDDS information are now written in a particular sector in front/behind of the data area, for example, in the LIA.

For example, referring to FIG. 8, the LIA 36 includes a DMA 36 c for storing therein the DMA information composed of the DDS and DFL information, and a TDMA area 36 e for storing therein the TDMA information composed of the TDDS and TDFL information. Other data may be also stored in the LIA 36.

This concept of the FIG. 8 embodiment is equally applicable to a BD-WO having a plurality of recording layers. For example, the embodiment of FIG. 8 is equally applicable to the dual layer BD-WO structure shown in FIG. 7. In that case, the structure of the dual layer BD-WO having DMA and TDMA information as discussed above in reference to FIG. 7 can be modified such that the TDFL areas can be located within the LIA and/or LOA of the dual layer BD-WO, in stead of being located within the data areas (33, 40) of the first and second layers. All other concepts associated with the FIG. 7 embodiment can apply herein.

In the present invention, the data reproducing operation can occur currently, subsequently or prior to the data writing operation. The data writing operation can occur currently, subsequently or prior to the defect detecting operation and/or data replacement writing operation and/or the management information writing operation. Also in the present invention, the order in which the DDS area, DFL area, TDDS area, and the TDFL area are allocated within the LIA and LOA may vary. For instance, in FIG. 4, the TDDS area 36 a may precede the DMA 36 c in the LIA 36.

As has been described, the method and apparatus for managing a defective area on a recording medium of write-once type permit reading and/or reproducing of data written on a defective area of the recording medium such as BD-WO, properly by writing the data on a spare area in lieu of the defective area and managing the temporary management data, effectively. In addition, the method and apparatus can read and reproduce the data written in other replacement areas when the first replacement area is found to be defective, using status information in a defect entry. The method and apparatus can stop unnecessary defect detecting and/or replacement writing operations if the spare area (replacement area) and the TDFL area are indicated as full based on flag information stored in TDDS information.

It will be apparent to those skilled in the art that various modifications and variations can be made in the present invention without departing from the spirit or scope of the invention. Thus, it is intended that the present invention cover the modifications and variations of this invention provided they come within the scope of the appended claims and their equivalents. 

1. A method for managing a defective unit on a recording medium, the recording medium including a first management area being a temporary management area, a second management area and a data area, the data area having a spare area, the method comprising: (a) writing data written in the defective unit onto a replacement unit in the spare area if the defective unit is detected within the data area; (b) writing first management information and second management information onto the first management area, the first management information including a location of at least the defective unit and the replacement unit, and the second management information including a location of the first management information; (c) updating the first and second management information based on the steps (a) and (b) until the recording medium is to be finalized; and (d) writing, at finalization of the recording medium where data recording to the recording medium is not permitted after the finalization of the recording medium, the updated first and second management information written in the first management area onto the second management area, wherein during the writing step (d) the updated second management information is modified to include a location of the first management information written in the second management area, wherein the first management area being the temporary management area is located in a lead-in area of the recording medium.
 2. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein the writing step (d) is performed only at the finalization of the recording medium.
 3. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein the second management area is also located in the lead-in area of the recording medium.
 4. An Apparatus for managing a defective unit on a recording medium, the recording medium including a first management area being a temporary management area, a second management area and a data area having a spare area, the apparatus comprising: an optical pickup configured to write/read data to/from the recording medium; a servo unit configured to control the pickup to maintain a distance between the pickup and the recording medium; and a controller configured to control the servo unit and pickup to write data written in the defective unit onto a replacement unit in the spare area if the defective unit is detected within the data area, and to write first management information including a location of at least the defective unit and the replacement unit and second management information including a location of the first management information onto the first management area, wherein the controller updates the first and second management information until the recording medium is to be finalized, and writes the updated first and second management information written in the first management area onto the second management area at finalization of the recording medium where data recording to the recording medium is not permitted after the finalization of the recording medium, wherein the updated second management information is modified to include a location of the first management information written in the second management area, and wherein the first management area being the temporary management area is located in a lead-in area of the recording medium.
 5. The apparatus as claimed in claim 4, wherein the controller writes the updated first and second management information written in the first management area onto the second management area only at the finalization of the recording medium.
 6. The apparatus as claimed in claim 4, wherein the second management area is also located in the lead-in area of the recording medium.
 7. A recording medium, comprising: at least one recording layer including a lead-in area, a data area and a lead-out area, the data area including at least one spare area, the spare area allocated on an inner and/or outer portion of the data area for replacement-writing data written in a defective unit of the data area onto a replacement unit in the spare area; at least one first management area being a temporary management area allocated within the lead-in area for temporarily writing first management information and second management information, the first management information including a location of at least the defective unit and replacement unit and second management information including a location of the first management information, wherein the first and second management information is updated in the first management area until the recording medium is to be finalized; and at least one second management area allocated outside of the data area, wherein the last updated first and second management information written in the first management area is written in the second management area at finalization of the recording medium where data recording to the recording medium is not permitted after the finalization of the recording medium, and the updated second management information is modified to include a location of the first management information written in the second management area.
 8. The recording medium as claimed in claim 7, wherein the last updated first and second management information written in the first management area is written in the second management area only at the finalization of the recording medium.
 9. The recording medium as claimed in claim 7, wherein the second management area is also located in the lead-in area of the recording medium.
 10. A write-once recording medium, comprising: at least one recording layer including a lead-in area, a data area and a lead-out area, the data area including at least one spare area having a replacement unit, the spare area allocated on an inner and/outer portion of the data area for replacement-writing data written in a defective unit of the data area onto the replacement unit; at least one temporary defect management area (TDMA) allocated within the lead-in area for writing temporary defect list (TDFL) pertaining to the defective unit and writing temporary disc definition structure (TDDS) including information indicating a location of the temporary defect list (TDFL); and at least one defect management area (DMA) allocated in the lead-in area and/or the lead- out area for writing therein last written TDFL and TDDS from the TDMA as a defect list (DFL) and a disc definition structure (DDS) respectively when the write-once recording medium is to be finalized, wherein the DDS is modified to include a location of the DFL instead of the location of the TDFL, and data recording to the write-once recording medium is not permitted after the finalization of the write-once recording medium.
 11. The write-once recording medium as claimed in claim 10, wherein the write-once recording medium is finalized when a user data area of the data area is full.
 12. The write-once recording medium as claimed in claim 10, wherein the last written TDFL and TDDS from the TDMA are transferred and written into the DMA as the DFL and DDS respectively, only at the finalization of the write-once recording medium. 